you can try playonLinux.. Its a good front-end of wine and also support specific configuration for such application.
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Web-EJul 26 '12 at 14:37

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This isn't quite an answer to how to run Office 2010 in Wine 1.4, but provided you have a license for Windows, you could easily install VMware and run a copy of Windows for all the Windows programs that you depend on. This is how me and many others I know deal with this kind of situation. In fact, the best way is to have dual-boot with smaller Windows install and the rest for Ubuntu. Then while in Ubuntu - virtualize the existing Windows install under VMware. This way you have a) easy to access Windows env in Ubuntu; b) Bare-metal Windows env for all other cases.
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lightrushJul 26 '12 at 15:34

I already did it with virtualizing, but the the notebook needs more energy and but it sucks to start every time the virtual maschine. But thank you for you answer! :)) greetings
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Nicolas NoxAug 3 '12 at 21:16

Use the Wine config tool to create a new wine prefix somewhere where you will install. In this prefix, under DLL overrides, set riched20 to the native version.

Before the installation, if your Ubuntu and Wine is 64-bit, add export WINEARCH=win32 on a new line in ~/.profile(It will be hidden, press Ctrl+H while viewing your home folder to see it)

Install as usual.

Unfortunately, the 64-bit version of Microsoft Office is reported to be garbage, while the 32-bit version ranks bronze, requiring installing wine-mono if it is not installed. Here are some of the 32-bit test results, paraphrased from the WineHQ AppDB: